Inflorescences

Inflorescences are clusters of flowers on a branch or a system of branches. They are categorized generally on the basis of the timing of their flowering and by their arrangement on an axis. In indeterminate inflorescences, the youngest flowers, and therefore the last to open, are either at the top of the inflorescence (in elongated axes) or in the centre (in truncated axes). Branching and the associated flowers develop at some distance from the main stem (monopodial growth). Indeterminate inflorescences are of varied types (Figure 15): racemes, panicles, spikes, catkins (or aments), corymbs, and heads.

A raceme is an inflorescence in which a flower develops at the axil of each leaf along an elongated, unbranched axis. Each flower terminates a short stalk called a pedicel. The main axis has indeterminate growth; therefore, its growth does not cease at the onset of flowering. A spike is a raceme except that the flowers are attached directly to the axis at the axil of each leaf rather than to a pedicel. An example of a spike is the cattail (Typha; Typhaceae). The fleshy spike characteristic of the Araceae is called a spadix, and the underlying bract is known as a spathe. A catkin (or ament) is a spike in which all the flowers are of only one sex, either staminate or carpellate. The catkin is usually pendulous, and the petals and sepals are reduced to aid in wind pollination when the inflorescence as a whole is shed. An example of a catkin is found in oaks. A corymb is a raceme in which the pedicels of the lower flowers are longer than those of the upper ones so that the appearance of the inflorescence overall is that of a flat flower. The lower flowers open first, and the axis of a corymb continues to produce flowers (indeterminate growth). Corymbs are found in the hawthorn (Crataegus; Rosaceae).

If the axis is short or stunted, the flowers arise from a common point and appear to be at approximately the same level. This pattern, called an umbel, is actually a flattened raceme because the internodes of the axis, or peduncle (the point of origin of the leaves and flower axes), are shortened so that the pedicels are of the same length (e.g., the carrot family). A head is a raceme in which the peduncle is flattened and the flowers are attached directly to it (e.g., aster family, Asteraceae). This results in a grouping of small flowers in such a way as to appear as a single flower. In many members of the Asteraceae (e.g., sunflowers, Helianthus annuus), for instance, the outer (or ray) flowers have a well-developed zygomorphic corolla, and the inner (disk) flowers have a small actinomorphic corolla. The inner disk flowers generally are complete flowers, and the ray flowers generally are sterile.

In the compound indeterminate inflorescences, the main axis is branched so that the many inflorescences form off the main axis. A panicle is a branched raceme in which the branches are themselves racemes (e.g., yuccas, Yucca). In a compound umbel, all the umbel inflorescences arise from a common point and appear to be at about the same level (e.g., wild carrot). This organization is the same for compound spikes, catkins, corymbs, and heads. The change from elongated axes (racemes and panicles) to flattened axes (corymbs and umbels) results in inflorescences in which the flowers are arranged close together. This close association encourages efficient pollination, and the extreme condensation of the inflorescences, as in the head, gives rise to an inflorescence that appears to be a single flower (e.g., sunflowers).

In the determinate (cymose) inflorescences, the youngest flowers (those that are the last to open) are at the bottom of an elongated axis or on the outside of a truncated axis (e.g., in the cymose umbel of onions, Allium; Alliaceae). These inflorescences are determinate because, at the time of flowering, the whole apical meristem produces a flower; thus, the entire axis ceases to grow. Each unit of a cyme consists of a dichasium, which has a central flower and two lateral flowers. The branching is primarily sympodial, and the inflorescence may be compound (e.g., catchfly, or campion, Silene; Caryophyllaceae). Many monocotyledons have a one-sided cyme called a helicoid cyme. A cymose inflorescence arranged in pairs at the nodes, in the manner of a false whorl, is called a verticillaster. Finally, there are mixed inflorescences—for instance, the cymose clusters arranged in a racemose manner (e.g., lilac, Syringa vulgaris; Oleaceae) or other types of combinations.